The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 08, 1975, Image 7

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THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8, 1975
Page 7-
Committee reviews candidates
Associated Press
OSLO — The Norwegian
Nobel Committee has discussed
50 candidates for this year’s
peace prize, including Spanish
Roman Catholic priest Luis
Maria Xirinachs, a fighter for
political peace in Spain, and
Russian dissident Andrei
Sakharov, informed sources
said.
The priest, 43, has long been
a thorn in the side of Spain s
authoritarian ruler Gen. Fran
cisco Franco. He campaigns
nonviolently for restoration of
civil rights and has been jailed
three times.
Officials in Madrid reported
Tuesday that Father Xirinachs
has been released from the
Madrid Carabanchel prison
after serving a two-year term for
illegal propaganda. During his
terms in jail, he spent long
periods on hunger strikes.
Tim Greve, director of the
Nobel Institute says a large
campaign is under way in Spain
to gain support for Father
Xirinachs’ selection.
“Ready-printed post cards
(supporting Father Xirinachs)
have flooded the institute,”
Greve said. ‘‘We have got
thousands of them recently.”
It was not known if those
qualified to nominate are be
hind the Spanish priest. Only
members of the Nobel Commit
tee, institute consultants, gov
ernment officials, some univer
sity professors and former peace
prize-winners are qualified to
nominate.
Eight Swedish parliamenta
rians have suggested selection
of the Soviet nuclear physicist
Sakharov, saying “Sakharov
stands up as a uniting symbol for
peace efforts in the Soviet
Union with the aim of increas
ing understanding among all
people of the world. ”
The Norwegian Nobel Com
mittee, composed of five men
and the woman chairman, is ex
pected to announce the peace
prize winner in the next week or
two. The Nobel prizes for
medicine, physics, chemistry
and literature are awarded in
Sweden.
The committee is not allowed
to give information on the per
sons or institutions nominated.
But those making the nomina
tions often reveal the names.
The prize money this year,
which goes with the Nobel gold
medal and diploma, is a record
$140,000 or 14 per cent higher
than last year.
Nominations were in by last
Feb. 1. A survey of press re
ports this year shows that be
sides Sakharov and Father
Xirinacs the nominated candi
dates include Finnish President
Urho Kekkonen; Yugoslav-born
Mother Theresa, the leader of
the Mission of Charity in India;
the International Press Institute
— the IPI; the Inter-American
Childrens Institute in
Uruguay, and the international
Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts or
ganizations.
The Norwegian Nobel Com
mittee has over the past few
years come up with several con
troversial and surprising deci
sions, including the 1973 joint
award to Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger and North
Vietnamese peace negotiator
Le Due Tho, who refused to ac
cept the prize money.
Former Japanese Prime
Minister Eisaku Sato and Irish
humanitarian Sean MacBride
shared the 1974 peace prize.
Besides Kissinger, other
American winners of the peace
prize since World War II have
included former Secretary of
State Cordell Hull, 1945;
former U.N. official Ralph
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COLLEGE AVE.
Bunche, 1950; former Secretary
of State George C. Marshall,
1953; scientists Linus Pauling,
1962, and Norman Borlag,
1970.
Hijack
involves
kidnap
victim
Associated Press
MANILA — An armed Filipino
hijacked a jetliner as it approached
Manila airport Tuesday and held it
captive on the ground for nearly
eight hours until authorities prom
ised to help find the 4-year-old
daughter he claimed had been kid
naped.
The jihacker, identified as Camilo
Morales, about 25, was coaxed into
surrendering in negotiations under
the belly of the Philippine Airlines
BAC-l-ll after officials had com
plied with his earlier demand to
ready the plane for a flight to Libya.
Maj. Gen. Fidel V. Ramos, com
mander of the Philippines con
stabulary, said the abduction of the
child had made Morales “mentally 1
unstable. •
He said the government had
“guaranteed to help the hijacker in =
solving his problem. Authorities r
said Morales told them his daughter |
was kidnaped several days ago in the L ‘
southern city of Davao, part of the
Mindanao region where Moslem 'i
rebels are fighting the regime of :
President Ferdinand E. Marcos, i
There bad been no previous word of e
such a kidnaping. >,
All of the passengers and airline ■
employes were reported safe after ' t
their ordeal. The plane carried 66
passengers and five crew members «.
when it was hijacked. During the e|
ground negotiations, 41 passengers ,
were released and four airline i
employes went aboard, including .
Executive Vice President Rafael
Igoa and the chief pilot.
Police said the hijacker was ^
armed with a .45-caliber pistol, a
grenade and 160 rounds of ammuni
tion and also claimed to have a bomb j
hidden aboard the plane.
One of three Americans aboard, :
Anne Leland of Fort Lauderdale, i‘
Fla., said the hijacker kissed her on i
the forehead and wished her a good
trip while ushering her and her
husband Charles, a retired e
businessman, off the aircraft about
three hours after landing. She de- i
scribed him as courteous and calm.
There have been three attempted:
airline hijackings in the Philippines'
since Marcos declared martial law in
September 1972, hut all have ended
in the hijackers surrender without,
harm to anyone or payment of ran-
OMBUDSMAN
If you have a question or com
plaint regarding news coverage
please contact our Ombuds
man’s office between 6 and 11
p.m., Monday through Thurs
day. We established the office
to help you with problems re
quiring the attention of any top
editorial personnel of The Bat
talion. Call
845-2611
or write Ombudsman, The
Battalion, Texas A&M Univer
sity, College Station, Texas,
77843.
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